Maja Lj. Bulatović
University of Belgrade
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Featured researches published by Maja Lj. Bulatović.
Food Chemistry | 2012
Aleksandra Djukić-Vuković; Ljiljana Mojović; Maja Vukašinović-Sekulić; Marica Rakin; Svetlana Nikolić; Jelena Pejin; Maja Lj. Bulatović
Expansion of lactic acid applications, predominantly for the preparation of biodegradable polymers increased the research interest for new, economically favourable production processes. Liquid stillage from bioethanol production can be an inexpensive, valuable source of nutrients for growth of lactic acid bacteria. Utilisation of residual biomass with spent fermentation media as a functional animal feed can greatly influence the process value and its ecological aspect. In this paper, the kinetics of lactic acid and biomass production on liquid stillage by Lactobacillus rhamnosus ATCC 7469 was studied. In addition, the impact of temperature, inoculum concentration, shaking and pH control by addition of CaCO(3) was evaluated. Maximal lactic acid yield of 73.4%, as well as high biomass production (3×10(8) CFU ml(-1)) were achieved under selected conditions (41°C, 5% (v/v) of inoculum, 1% (w/v) of CaCO(3), initial pH of 6.5 and shaking rate of 90 rpm). These results were achieved without supplementation of the stillage with nitrogen or mineral sources.
RSC Advances | 2016
Danica Zarić; Maja Lj. Bulatović; Marica Rakin; Tanja Ž. Krunić; Ivana Lončarević; Biljana Pajin
The aim of this study was to investigate the survival of probiotics (Lactobacillus acidophilus NCFM, Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 and Bifidobacterium lactis HN019) in milk chocolate masses prepared at temperatures 35 °C and 40 °C. The influence of probiotics and preparation temperature on rheology, particle size distribution and sensory properties of the chocolates, was examined during 6 months of storage at 20 ± 2 °C. An inoculation temperature of 40 °C significantly improves the rheological and sensory properties of probiotic chocolate, as well as leading to the survival of L. acidophilus NCFM and L. rhamnosus HN001 strains. After 6 months of storage, the survival of these strains was above 90%, with a viable cell count of about 8.1 log(CFU g−1). An inoculation temperature of 40 °C provides higher scores of overall sensory quality (4.52–4.68), higher quality category (excellent), lower maximal viscosity (for 1.2 Pa s) of chocolates, than a temperature of 35 °C. Compared to the chocolate without probiotics, those inoculated at 40 °C achieved less increase in volume weighted mean diameter distribution (average 0.8%) than chocolates inoculated at 35 °C. Based on the results reported in this paper, seeding of the probiotics in industrial conditions can be done in the mixing tank (at 40 °C) before the phase of chocolate shaping. Addition of probiotics at this stage facilitates the manufacturing process, improves the overall quality of chocolate and preserves the probiotics as a key component of this type of product.
International Journal of Polymer Science | 2015
Nataša S. Obradović; Tanja Ž. Krunić; Kata Trifković; Maja Lj. Bulatović; Marko Rakin; Marica Rakin; Branko Bugarski
The aim of this study was to improve the mechanical stability of biopolymer carriers and cell viability with addition of chitosan coating during fermentation process and product storage. Dairy starter culture (1% (w/v)) was diluted in whey and mixed with sodium alginate solution and the beads were made using extrusion technique. The mechanical stability of coated and uncoated beads, the release behavior, and the viability of encapsulated probiotic dairy starter culture in fermented whey beverages were analyzed. The mechanical properties of the beads were determined according to force-displacement and engineering stress-strain curves obtained after compression testing. It was observed that addition of chitosan as a coating on the beads as well as the fermentation process increased the elastic modulus of the calcium alginate-whey beads and cell survival. The current study revealed that the coating did not significantly improve the viability of probiotics during the fermentation but had an important influence on preservation of the strength of the carrier during storage. Our results indicate that whey-based substrate has positive effect on the mechanical stability of biopolymer beads with encapsulated probiotics.
Archive | 2018
Tanja Ž. Krunić; Marica Rakin; Maja Lj. Bulatović; Danica Zarić
Abstract Whey proteins are sources of biologically active peptides that can be released by controlled enzymatic hydrolysis or bacterial activity. Whey peptides have a wide range of bioactivities (ACE-inhibitory activity, antioxidant activity, antiinflammatory, antimicrobial), so these peptides are more suitable as ingredients in functional foods than molecules with only one substantial characteristic. Bioactive peptides derived from whey protein and added into probiotic-fermented products and confectionery products (as chocolate, biscuit, or cream) affect human health directly and indirectly. These peptides increase the viable number of probiotic bacteria, increase the stability of the probiotic products, and act in the human organism as antioxidants and ACE inhibitors, increase proliferation of intestinal epithelial cells, and so forth. Bioactive peptides are suitable for application in food because of the simple procedure to produce and separate it. In summary, this chapter describes the biological activity of peptides and their practical application in food products.
Chemical Industry & Chemical Engineering Quarterly | 2014
Maja Lj. Bulatović; Marica Rakin; Ljiljana Mojović; Svetlana Nikolić; Maja Vukašinović-Sekulić; Aleksandra Djukić-Vuković
International Dairy Journal | 2014
Maja Lj. Bulatović; Marica Rakin; Maja Vukašinović-Sekulić; Ljiljana Mojović; Tanja Ž. Krunić
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2016
Tanja Ž. Krunić; Maja Lj. Bulatović; Nataša S. Obradović; Maja Vukašinović-Sekulić; Marica Rakin
International Journal of Dairy Technology | 2018
Salem Embiriekah; Maja Lj. Bulatović; Milka Borić; Danica Zarić; Marica Rakin
RSC Advances | 2014
Maja Lj. Bulatović; Tanja Ž. Krunić; Maja Vukašinović-Sekulić; Danica Zarić; Marica Rakin
Hemijska Industrija | 2012
Maja Lj. Bulatović; Marica Rakin; Ljiljana Mojović; Svetlana Nikolić; Maja Vukašinović-Sekulić; Aleksandra Djukić-Vuković